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Vertebrate

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Subphylum of chordates

Vertebrate
Diversity: asturgeon (Actinopterygii), anelephant (Tetrapoda), ashark (Chondrichthyes) and alamprey (Agnatha).
Scientific classificationEdit this classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom:Animalia
Superphylum:Deuterostomia
Phylum:Chordata
Clade:Olfactores
Subphylum:Vertebrata
J-B. Lamarck, 1801[2]
Infraphyla
Synonyms

OsseaBatsch, 1788[2]

Vertebrates (/ˈvɜːrtəbrɪts,-ˌbrts/)[3] areanimals with avertebral column (backbone or spine), and acranium, or skull. The vertebral column surrounds and protects thespinal cord, while the cranium protects thebrain.

The vertebrates make up thesubphylumVertebrata with some 65,000 species, by far the largest ranked grouping in thephylumChordata. The vertebrates includemammals,birds,amphibians, and various classes offish andreptiles. The fish include the jawlessAgnatha, and the jawedGnathostomata. The jawed fish include both thecartilaginous fish and thebony fish. Bony fish include thelobe-finned fish, which gave rise to thetetrapods, the animals with four limbs. Despite their success, vertebrates still only make up less than five percent of all describedanimal species.

The first vertebrates appeared in theCambrian explosion some 518 million years ago. Jawed vertebrates evolved in theOrdovician, followed by bony fishes in theDevonian. The first amphibians appeared on land in theCarboniferous. During theTriassic,mammals anddinosaurs appeared, the latter giving rise tobirds in theJurassic. Extant species are roughly equally divided between fishes of all kinds, and tetrapods. Populations of many species have been in steep decline since 1970 because ofland-use change,overexploitation ofnatural resources,climate change,pollution and the impact ofinvasive species.

Characteristics

[edit]

Unique features

[edit]

Vertebrates belong toChordata, aphylum characterised by fivesynapomorphies (unique characteristics): namely anotochord, ahollow nerve cord along the back, anendostyle (often as athyroid gland), and pharyngealgills arranged in pairs. Vertebrates share these characteristics with other chordates.[4]

Vertebrates are distinguished from all other animals, including other chordates, by multiple synapomorphies: namely the vertebral column, skull of bone or cartilage, large brain divided into 3 or more sections, a muscular heart with multiple chambers; an inner ear withsemicircular canals; sense organs including eyes, ears, and nose; and digestive organs including intestine, liver, pancreas, and stomach.[5]

Physical

[edit]
See also:Fish anatomy
Idealised vertebrate body plan, showing key characteristics

Vertebrates (and other chordates) belong to theBilateria, a group of animals with mirror symmetrical bodies.[6] They move, typically by swimming, usingmuscles along the back, supported by a strong but flexibleskeletal structure, the spine orvertebral column.[7] The name 'vertebrate' derives from theLatinvertebratus, 'jointed',[8] fromvertebra, 'joint', in turn from Latinvertere, 'to turn'.[9]

Fossilized skeleton (cast) ofDiplodocus carnegii, showing an extreme example of thevertebral column that gives the vertebrates their name. The species is atetrapod, its four legs adapting the fish-like body plan for walking on land. The specimen is 26 m (85 ft) long.

As embryos, vertebrates still have a notochord; as adults, all but thejawless fishes have a vertebral column, made ofbone orcartilage, instead.[7] Vertebrate embryos havepharyngeal arches; in adultfish, these support thegills, while in adulttetrapods they develop into other structures.[10][11]

In the embryo, alayer of cells along the backfolds and fuses into a hollowneural tube.[12] This develops into thespinal cord, and at its front end, thebrain.[12] The brain receives information about the world through nerves which carry signals fromsense organs in the skin and body.[13] Because the ancestors of vertebrates usually moved forwards, the front of the body encountered stimuli before the rest of the body, favouringcephalisation, the evolution of a head containing sense organs and a brain to process the sensory information.[14]

Vertebrates have a tubulargut that extends from themouth to theanus. The vertebral column typically continues beyond the anus to form an elongatedtail.[15][16][17]

Branchial arches bearinggills in apike

The ancestral vertebrates, and most extant species, areaquatic and carry outgas exchange in their gills. The gills are finely-branched structures which bring the blood close to the water. They are positioned just behind the head, supported by cartilaginous or bonybranchial arches.[18] Injawed vertebrates, the first gill arch pair evolved into the jaws.[19] Inamphibians and some primitive bony fishes, the larvae haveexternal gills, branching off from the gill arches.[20]Oxygen is carried from the gills to the body in theblood, andcarbon dioxide is returned to the gills, in a closedcirculatory system driven by a chamberedheart.[21] Thetetrapods have lost the gills of their fish ancestors; they have adapted theswim bladder (that fish use for buoyancy) intolungs to breathe air, and the circulatory system is adapted accordingly.[22] At the same time, they adapted the bony fins of thelobe-finned fishes into two pairs of walkinglegs, carrying the weight of the body via theshoulder and pelvic girdles.[22]

Vertebrates vary in size from the smallestfrog species such asBrachycephalus pulex, with a minimum adultsnout–vent length of 6.45 millimetres (0.254 in)[23] to theblue whale, at up to 33 m (108 ft) and weighing some 150 tonnes.[24]

Molecular

[edit]

Molecular markers known asconserved signature indels inprotein sequences have been identified and provide distinguishing criteria for the vertebrate subphylum.[25] Five molecular markers are exclusively shared by all vertebrates and reliably distinguish them from all other animals; these include protein synthesiselongation factor-2,eukaryotic translation initiation factor 3,adenosine kinase and a protein related toubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase).[25] A specific relationship between vertebrates andtunicates is supported by two molecular markers, the proteinsRrp44 (associated with theexosome complex) andserine C-palmitoyltransferase. These are exclusively shared by species from these two subphyla, but not by cephalochordates.[25]

Evolutionary history

[edit]

Cambrian explosion: first vertebrates

[edit]
Further information:Cambrian explosion
TheCambrianHaikouichthys, 518mya[26]

Vertebrates originated during theCambrian explosion at the start of the Paleozoic, which saw a rise in animal diversity. The earliest known vertebrates belong to theChengjiang biota[27] and lived about 518 million years ago.[1] These includeHaikouichthys,Myllokunmingia,[27]Zhongjianichthys,[26] and probablyYunnanozoon.[28] Unlike other Cambrian animals, these groups had the basic vertebrate body plan: a notochord, rudimentary vertebrae, and a well-defined head and tail, but lacked jaws.[29] A vertebrate group of uncertain phylogeny, small eel-likeconodonts, are known frommicrofossils of their paired tooth segments from the late Cambrian to the end of the Triassic.[30] Zoologists have debated whether teethmineralized first, given the hard teeth of the soft-bodied conodonts, and then bones, or vice versa, but it seems that the mineralized skeleton came first.[31]

Paleozoic: from fish to amphibians

[edit]
See also:Evolution of fish andEvolution of tetrapods
Acanthostega, aDevonianlabyrinthodont,c. 365 mya[32]

The firstjawed vertebrates may have appeared in the lateOrdovician (~445 mya) and became common in theDevonian period, often known as the "Age of Fishes".[33] The two groups ofbony fishes,Actinopterygii andSarcopterygii, evolved and became common.[34] By the middle of the Devonian, a lineage of sarcopterygii with both gills and air-breathing lungs adapted to life in swampy pools used their muscular paired fins to propel themselves on land.[35] The fins, already possessing bones and joints, evolved into two pairs of walking legs.[36] These established themselves asamphibians, terrestrialtetrapods, in the next geological period, theCarboniferous.[37] A group of vertebrates, theamniotes, with membranes around theembryo allowing it to survive on dry land, branched from amphibious tetrapods in the Carboniferous.[38]

Mesozoic: from reptiles to mammals and birds

[edit]
Hyperodapedon, adiapsid reptile of theTriassic,c. 230 mya

At the onset of the Mesozoic, all larger vertebrate groups were devastated after thelargest mass extinction in earth history. The followingrecovery phase saw the emergence of many new vertebrate groups that are still around today, and this time has been described as the origin of modern ecosystems. On the continents, the ancestors of modernlissamphibians,turtles,crocodilians,lizards, and mammals appeared, as well asdinosaurs, which gave rise to birds later in the Mesozoic. In the seas, various groups of marine reptiles evolved, as did new groups of fish.[38] At the end of the Mesozoic,another extinction event extirpated dinosaurs (other than birds) and many other vertebrate groups.[39]

Cenozoic: Age of Mammals

[edit]
Nahmavis, anEocene bird,c. 50 mya

TheCenozoic, the current era, is sometimes called the "Age of Mammals", because of the dominance of the terrestrial environment by that group.Placental mammals have predominantly occupied the Northern Hemisphere, withmarsupial mammals in the Southern Hemisphere.[40][41]

Approaches to classification

[edit]

Taxonomic history

[edit]

In 1811,Jean-Baptiste Lamarck defined the vertebrates as a taxonomic group,[2] aphylum distinct from theinvertebrates he was studying.[42] He described them as consisting of four classes, namely fish, reptiles, birds, and mammals,[43] but treated thecephalochordates andtunicates asmolluscs.[42] In 1866,Ernst Haeckel called both his "Craniata" (vertebrates) and his "Acrania" (cephalochordates) "Vertebrata".[42] In 1877,Ray Lankester grouped the Craniates, cephalochordates, and "Urochordates (tunicates) as "Vertebrata".[42] In 1880–1881,Francis Maitland Balfour placed the Vertebrata as a subphylum within the Chordates.[42] In 2018, Naoki Irie and colleagues proposed making Vertebrata a full phylum.[42]

Traditional taxonomy

[edit]
Diversity of various groups of vertebrates through thegeologic ages. The width of the bubbles signifies the number offamilies.

Conventionalevolutionary taxonomy groupsextant vertebrates into seven classes based on traditional interpretations of grossanatomical andphysiological traits. The commonly held classification lists three classes of fish and four oftetrapods.[44] This ignores some of the natural relationships between the groupings. For example, the birds derive from a group of reptiles, so "Reptilia" excluding "Aves" is nota natural grouping; it is described asparaphyletic.[45][46]

In addition to these, there are two classes of extinct armoured fishes,Placodermi andAcanthodii, both paraphyletic.

Other ways of classifying the vertebrates have been devised, particularly with emphasis on thephylogeny ofearly amphibians and reptiles. An example based on work by M.J. Benton in 2004[47] is given here († =extinct):

While this traditional taxonomy is orderly, most of the groups are paraphyletic, meaning that the structure does not accurately reflect the natural evolved grouping.[47] For instance, descendants of the first reptiles include modern reptiles, mammals and birds; the agnathans have given rise to the jawed vertebrates; thebony fishes have given rise to theland vertebrates; a group of amphibians, thelabyrinthodonts, have given rise to thereptiles (traditionally including the mammal-like synapsids), which in turn have given rise to the mammals and birds. Most scientists working with vertebrates use a classification based purely on phylogeny, organized by their known evolutionary history.[42]

External phylogeny

[edit]

The closest relatives of vertebrates have been debated over the years. It was once thought that theCephalochordata was thesister taxon to Vertebrata. This group, Notochordata, was taken to be sister to theTunicata.[48] Since 2006, analysis has shown that the tunicates + vertebrates form a clade, the Olfactores, with Cephalochordata as its sister (theOlfactores hypothesis), as shown in the followingphylogenetic tree.[49][50][25]

Chordata

Internal phylogeny

[edit]

The internal phylogeny of the vertebrates is shown in the below tree.[51]

Vertebrata
(backbone)

The placement of hagfishes within the vertebrates has been controversial. Their lack of proper vertebrae (among other characteristics of jawless lampreys and jawed vertebrates) led authors of phylogenetic analyses based onmorphology to place them outside Vertebrata.[52]Molecular data however indicates that they are vertebrates, being most closely related to lampreys.[53][54] An older view is that they are a sister group of vertebrates in the common taxon of Craniata.[55] In 2019, Tetsuto Miyashita and colleagues reconciled the two types of analysis, supporting theCyclostomata hypothesis using only morphological data.[56]

Myllokunmingiida

Vertebrata
(crown group)

Diversity

[edit]

Species by group

[edit]

Described and extant vertebrate species are split roughly evenly but non-phylogenetically between non-tetrapod "fish" and tetrapods. The following table lists the number of describedextant species for each vertebrateclass as estimated in theIUCN Red List of Threatened Species, 2014.3.[57] Paraphyletic groups are shown in quotation marks.

Vertebrate groupsImageClassEstimated number of
described species[57][58]
Group
totals[57]
Anamniote

lack
amniotic
membrane

so need to
reproduce
in water
Jawless"Fish"Myxini
(hagfish)
78>32,900
Hyperoartia
(lampreys)
40
JawedChondrichthyes>1,100
Actinopterygii>32,000
"Sarcopterygii"8
TetrapodsAmphibia7,30233,278
Amniote

have
amniotic
membrane

adapted to
reproducing
on land
"Reptilia"10,711
Mammalia5,513
Aves

(birds)

10,425
Total described species66,178

The IUCN estimates that 1,305,075extant invertebrate species have been described,[57] which means that less than 5% of thedescribed animal species in the world are vertebrates.[59]

Population trends

[edit]

TheLiving Planet Index, following 16,704 populations of 4,005 species of vertebrates, shows a decline of 60% between 1970 and 2014.[60] Since 1970, freshwater species declined 83%, and tropical populations in South and Central America declined 89%.[61] The authors note that "An average trend in population change is not an average of total numbers of animals lost."[61] According toWWF, this could lead to a sixthmajor extinction event.[62] The five main causes ofbiodiversity loss areland-use change,overexploitation ofnatural resources,climate change,pollution andinvasive species.[63]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Agnatha as traditionally defined is paraphyletic, that is, a taxon including all jawless fishes, but if one only includes living species then the group becomes monophyletic.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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Wikispecies has information related toVertebrata.
Animalia
ParaHoxozoa
(Planulozoa)
Bilateria (Triploblasts)
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Thephylogeny of the animal rootis disputed; see also
Eumetazoa
Benthozoa
Bilateria
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Protostomia
Ecdysozoa
Scalidophora
N+L+P
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Brachiozoa

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